Pink Floyd: Nick Mason is ‘available’ for band reunion

Pink Floyd: Nick Mason is ‘available’ for band reunion

Iconic rock band Pink Floyd was active until 2014

With the members of pink Floyd separated for almost 10 years, the drummer Nick Mason revealed how tempted he would be to be “available” for a possible reunion of the band, which also featured david gilmour It is roger waters in training.

During an interview with The Sun, mason was asked about the possibilities of the legendary British rock group to reunite again. “You never know what’s going to happen. I’m tempted to say I’m available for anything,” said the musician.


Pink Floyd’s Nick Mason weighs in on Roger Waters’ Dark Side of the Moon re-recording

iconic disc pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon will be re-recorded by roger waters without the other members. now the drummer Nick Mason weighed in on the production of the new version of the British progressive rock band’s eighth studio album.

Released on March 1, 1973, The Dark Side of the Moon turned 50 in 2023 and is one of the most important albums in rock history. While playing the album on Dolby Atmos Immersive Studio (via NME), In London, mason revealed how he had already heard excerpts from the re-recording and was full of praise for waters.

Cover of The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd
Cover of The Dark Side of the Moon, by Pink Floyd (Photo: Disclosure)

“I heard the rumor that roger worked on the version itself. There was this suggestion that this would be a bad thing and roger would face the original version and so on,” stated the musician. “In fact, he sent me a copy of what he was working on and I replied: ‘Annoyingly, it’s absolutely brilliant!'”

It was and is. It’s nothing to spoil the original, it’s an interesting addition to the thing.

Furthermore, Nick Mason also explained why he supports the concept of revisiting classic music and revamping it: “One of the things I like about any kind of existing music is to develop it or find some extra quality in it. I like this idea of ​​developing music rather than trying to keep it exactly as it was.”

Source: Rollingstone

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